Agents · Canada

Self-Submission for Actors

Submitting yourself, professionally, without an agent.

Self-submission is the process of finding and applying to acting roles directly, without agent representation. It is standard practice for actors who are unrepresented, and also for signed actors on platforms their agent does not cover. This page covers the main casting platforms (Casting Networks, Actors Access, Spotlight, StarNow), how to write a self-submission that reads as professional, and how to track your submissions so you are not applying to the same role twice.

The approach

What this actually looks like in practice

The short version of this work: research carefully, submit precisely, expect silence, improve the package, submit again. Most of the effort is in the research and the specificity. Volume will not save a vague submission.

Before submitting to a single agent, spend a day reading the agency's client list. Look for the shape of the list: what stage of career do they represent, what kind of work do those clients book, is the agency strong in screen or stage or both. A well-matched agency is one whose current clients look like the actor you are about to become, not the actor you are today.

Your submission package is four things: a current headshot, a short showreel, a one-page resume, and a cover letter. None of these are negotiable. If you do not have a reel, submit a ninety-second self-tape and say so. Do not hide it. Agents reward honest staging.

The cover letter is the piece most actors get wrong. It is not a CV summary. It is a short, specific argument for why you are approaching that specific agency. Two sentences on you, two sentences on them, one sentence on what you are asking for. Anything longer is filler.

What to include

Practical checklist

  • Current headshot. Updated within the last eighteen months. High resolution, neutral background, natural expression.
  • Showreel. Under two minutes. Strongest dramatic beat in the first fifteen seconds.
  • Resume. One page. Current credits, training, skills relevant to screen, agent representation (if any). Height, eye colour, and union memberships where required by the market.
  • Cover letter. Five sentences maximum. Specific to the agency. No template language.
  • Contact details. A working email and phone number. No shared family accounts for adult actors.
  • Canada market fit. Name the platforms you submit through (Casting Workbook, Casting Networks) and your union status with the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) if applicable.
After the submission

What to do with the silence

Most agents will not reply. This is not personal. Assume the silence is the response, unless you receive anything else. A single, brief follow-up after four to six weeks is acceptable. Beyond that, move to the next batch.

When you do get a meeting, you are not yet signed. The meeting is its own audition. Prepare for it the way you would prepare for a callback. See the guide on preparing for an agent meeting.

Canada specifics

How this applies in Canada

In Canada, the primary actors' union is the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA). Most agents work through Casting Workbook, Casting Networks.

The production base for the market sits across Toronto (Pinewood Toronto Studios, CBS Stages Canada), Vancouver (the long-running “Hollywood North” production base), and Montreal (MELS Studios, serving a significant Quebecois and US production pipeline).. A good submission package reads as if it was written by an actor who already understands where the work is actually shot in the country, not one who has generic coverage in mind.

Frequently asked questions

  • How long should I expect this process to take?

    Weeks to months, not days. Agent responses are slow, and the iteration of improving your package based on what you learn is part of the process.

  • Will Tingley's introduce me to an agent in Canada?

    Rarely, and only where Freya has worked with you and knows your current level. We do not run a pay-for-referral model.

  • What is different about the Canada market?

    Platforms, unions, and submission conventions. In Canada, the working standard is the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) for union representation and Casting Workbook, Casting Networks for casting platforms. The underlying principles are the same everywhere: research, specificity, and patience.

Want a second opinion on your submission?

Book a call. We will look at your reel, your headshot, and your cover letter, and tell you what we see in the Canada market.